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BlackAthlete Sports Network-www.blackathlete.net Editorial
He issued the following during a press conference several days ago: “This is a good woman and she had been put through hell. I’ll have to live with this for a very long time.I want to close the chapter on a very difficult period in Civil
Rights” “The buck stops with me as it should.” Sherrod was offered a new position within the Agriculture
Department but she’s yet to accept. She
wants to speak with President Barack Obama but up to this point that
conversation hasn’t taken place. "Will there be another “beer summit?” Here’s what Sherrod had to say: I can’t say that the
president is fully behind me,” Sherrod told ABC's George Stephanopoulos. “I
would hope that he is. ... I would love to talk to him.” President Obama is quiet and White House Press Secretary Robert
Gibbs was his usual vague self as he didn’t commit to an exact time when
President Obama was briefed on the Sherrod situation. There won’t be another “teachable moment” because one it never took place last year when the esteemed scholar Henry Louis Gates was treated like a second-class slave. President Obama had Gates along with the SGT. John Crawley over to the
White House to put a few back and iron things out. Nothing of substance came from the meeting
because it wasn’t designed to. It was
about political posturing and not justice. Let’s move beyond the Sherrod situation and look at the
bigger picture. There are not enough
people who are affected by racism who are not allowed in the conversation. Gates and Sherrod are not indicative of what
transpires in the mainstream consistently: Wouldn’t it make sense to get
feelings from the horses’ mouth? Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson are the self-proclaimed voices
for African-Americans at times.
Generally their causes are noble yet ultimately the oppressed masses
need to take responsibility for their destiny. The key is that have a collective discussion about race
that’s on-going. Like the Gates
situation, Sherrod’s will soon disappear from our collective memories. It will represent another missed opportunity
to truly make a difference and march to truth via justice. President Obama already has the keys to the White
House. He can no longer use the excuse
of evading race because he wants to win the race. President Obama can surely use his platform to diffuse race but if he doesn’t fine. Some
of us are not afraid to engage and articulate what needs to be said whether he
does or not. Here’s my take on Sherrod: She’ll get her job back. But it isn’t about her job; it’s about how
she was treated. It’s about race and the
media. Lastly it’s about time to really
have that “teachable moment” If I were in charge this is what I’d do: First things first.
Define what racism is, who is responsible and how it came to infiltrate America. Can’t understand the weed until you first understand the
seed. Let’s start with the rise of American slavery as the
prototypical example of racism. We all
need to understand what happened there and who was responsible. Next need to understand what role the judicial system has
played in fostering racial injustice. We need to understand what the economical
ramifications are surrounding racism a well. We need to understand the media and the role it’s played in
infiltrating our collective minds by the concept of social-engineering. The most important cog in having this teachable moment is racism
is often about economics and not color.
Ultimately it’s about those who have and have not. It’s about those who own and control
oppressing the masses. Who usually wins? Racism is the ultimate thief of opportunity that keeps the
oppressed at the bottom rungs of society.
Racism isn’t entirely about color yet that’s the most salient feature disseminated
amongst the masses so that’s what the media focuses on most. In order to a discussion about racism that’s viable it has
to be open and honest. That means a
segment of white America
will be forced to view items from history that will be rather disturbing. The only way to truly face it is to deal with
it. No, this discussion will not reach
everyone but it can consistently put it in play how things were and how they
can be. At the end of the day those at the top will not give up what
they’ve accumulated via oppression without being forced to do so. With regards to the Sherrod situation as it comes to a
close, after all of the apologies and getting her job back what will have been
really learned? Sadly we’ll leave this situation like the many others that have occurred and that’s with a bunch of apologies but no real change. © Copyright 2005 by BlackAthlete Sports Network |
